Consumer/Investor Disclosures:- Crypto-Currency is a new, UNTESTED, and rapidly evolving technology.- Crypto-Currency has historically been EXTREMELY VOLATILE and may not be a stable investment.- Disbursements and/or transfers of funds on the Clam Network, like all crypto-currencies, are NON-REVERSIBLE.- The Software provided for the CLAM Network is provided WITHOUT GUARANTEE, WARRANTY and AS IS.

Every person who had Bitcoin at block 300,377, Litecoin at block 565,693, or Dogecoin at block 218,556 was given ~4.6 CLAM. Yes, it is still waiting on chain for you

The intention would be to wait until Clams are available to purchase at market. We have yet to see a reasonable crypto-currency that didn't make it to a reasonably reliable market; and indeed have already been in talks with multiple markets.

Assuming the worst case scenario, and a zombie apocalypse prevented it from EVER reaching a market -> I give you my word every last BTC would arrive one way or another on the door-step of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, or another such Net-Neutrality and Freedom Non-Profit.

I don't forsee that being a problem though, and the intention is to accrue a bit until market introduction and we can start up our trading scripts

If most exchanges keep coins in a separate address for each user, then they will control the vast majority of clams. Most users probably keep all their coins in one address if they run a wallet on their computer.

If most exchanges keep coins in a separate address for each user, then they will control the vast majority of clams. Most users probably keep all their coins in one address if they run a wallet on their computer.

Although you are partially correct, most users do not quite understand how the standard wallet functions.

CLAMS were sent to unique addresses with unspent OUTPUTS. Most even marginally active personal wallets, which haven't sent their entire balance (combining outputs) should have multiple unspent outputs in multiple addresses.

Indeed, as a common measure of security and privacy, it is ALWAYS recommended that users use a different receive address for each payment they receive.

In addition, a commonly unknown fact is that the client automatically creates 100 "change" addresses, in the background. Each and every time you send a coin from one place to the next, all outputs utilized must be allocated entirely. This means that your payment goes to the receiving address, and the rest of those ouputs arrives in what are called "change" addresses.

A long-winded explanation to a commonly misunderstood concept; our apologies.

BTC wallet which HAD coins roughly a handful of days ago when we did our data scrape of the block chains. You could quite safely send those coins wherever you please at this point, and it would not affect your current balance of CLAMS on the clam network.

The doge blockchain has become so big that someone invented multidoge, similar to multibit for bitcoin. What happens to all the multibit and multidoge users? They do not have wallet.dat files and will probably lack the technical skills to export keys.